ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 25 octobre 2014

    A KTM WE’D RIDE ON ANY SUNDAY


    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    Call me old-fashioned, but I reckon dirt bikes have lost the plot in the styling stakes: give me an Elsinore over a CRF any day. And we could devote acres of pixels to the beautiful machines coming out of Spain in the 60s and 70s.
    So wouldn’t it be great if you could match the performance and reliability of a modern-day motocross weapon with the elegant, desert sled styling of yore? That’s the thinking behind this latest build from Roland Sands—a KTM 450 SX-F with the aesthetics of a long-gone bomb runner.
    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    “There’s just something great about the simplistic lines of vintage bikes,” says Roland. “And the cool thing about customizing modern day motocrossers is that underneath the plastics, the bones really haven’t strayed too far from the bikes of the past.”
    So Roland stripped the KTM back to the mechanical components, and sketched out a new, easy-on-the-eye design. Then fabricator Aaron Boss, mechanic Scott Dimick and project manager Cameron Brewer set to work.
    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    First up is a hand-fabricated aluminum gas tank—with matching side panels and number plates—and a chromoly subframe. If the fenders look familiar, that’s because they’re based on a 1974 Husqvarna design.
    The controls were chosen with one man in mind: off-road racer Kurt Caselli, who died during the 2013 Baja 1000. Why? Because the KTM will be auctioned off to raise funds for the Kurt Caselli Foundation—an organization promoting safety for off-road racers.
    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    The bike features Caselli’s preferred bars, grips, levers, pegs and wheels, using knowledge from his factory mechanic Anthony Di Basilio. “We think this bike would be set up just how Kurt would have liked it,” says Roland.
    Best of all, the core of the machine is unmodified, from the engine to the frame. “You could pretend you’re riding down cow trails alongside Steve McQueen one day—then return it back to a stock KTM 450 SX-F, and go race Anaheim 1 with it the next.”
    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    The Caselli bike is one of the stars of the upcoming blockbuster On Any Sunday, The Next Chapter. But there’s a shorter, more touching film about its significance, which you can see below.
    If you’d like to put this fine machine in your own garage, head over to the Compass Auctions site right now.
    Bike and performance parts donated by KTM USA.
    Other contributors include Airtrix (paint), FMF (custom titanium exhaust), Dunlop (tires), Taw Performance (Brembo race calipers), Bitchin Seat Company, Dubya (Talon hubs, spokes and nipples), RK Excel American (Excel A60 rims), Race Tech (suspension mods), Renthal USA (handlebars, grips and sprockets), D.I.D. (chain), K&N (air filter and breather), Enduro Engineering (skidplate), Spiegler USA (brake lines), IMS Products (footpegs), Lightspeed (carbon fiber fork guards and brake line guide), BRP (rear chain guide) and Matrix Concepts (Kurt Caselli Foundation bike stand).
    Images by Joseph Hitzelberger.
    No, it's not a vintage dirtbike: It's a KTM 450 SX-F cleverly customized by Roland Sands Design.
    via BIKEexif

    1985 BMW R80 ST by Fuel Motorcycles


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    Written by Martin Hodgson.
    As static pieces of motorcycle art the creations of Fuel Bespoke Motorcycles are perfectly at home amongst the best in the business. The fact that they also excel at the tough world of long distance trial riding is truly incredible. Inspired by the heyday of International Six Days Trials proprietor of Fuel Bespoke Motorcycles Karles Vives builds some of the most battle hardened customs on the planet, not built just to look like they can take on desserts, they can and do! So when Didier, a French customer saw Fuel’s own R80 STrial, he made the call and ordered one customised just to his liking.
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    The blank canvas is a 1985 BMW R80 ST thoroughly eliminated of everything Karles deems unworthy of his creations. Borrowing from the BMW parts catalogue is the more suitable K75 sport front end that required modifications to the axle and triple trees to work. Designed in house by Fuel and then built by a brake specialist is the front stopping power that includes a large 320mm disc, Brembo 4 piston caliper and Nissin master cylinder.
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    Didier’s brief included a seat capable of riding two up, a distinct difference from the original STrial which is strictly solo. With this in mind Karles developed an entirely new sub frame that is both shorter and narrower than stock and importantly much stronger for those long days off road. Ensuring the rear tyre is planted and handling all manner of terrain is a multi-adjustable Wilbers shock, while rider and potential passenger sit in style on the hand crafted Fuel seat.
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    With the rigors of trials riding reliability becomes hugely important if you don’t want to get stranded out in the wilderness. So the emphasis is on keeping things simple, but that didn’t stop Karles from fitting a 2 plus 2 exhaust arrangement with stunning Hoske mufflers. While the engine remains distinctively BMW the tank is in fact taken from a Kawasaki z900 and painted like the original STrial giving the otherwise boxy Bavarian some distinctly flowing lines.
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    Completing the form and function of this special trials machine are Tomasselli handlebars and SW-Motech on-Road/Off-Road Footpegs for controls while a Motogadget speedo relays the vitals. The headlight is taken from a classic Spanish trials bike mounted with Fuel brackets and Indicators from Moto Posh Japan. The front and rear guards, spoked rims and Continental TKC 80 tires complete the utilitarian trials look.
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    And if you still weren’t convinced of Karles trials credentials the crew at Fuel Bespoke Motorcycles organise the annual Scram Africa, a trip of more than 2000 km for classic trail and neoclassic bikes to the south of Morocco by road, trail and dune. And with everything from factory built adventure bikes from the big makers to one off Fuel customs it surely must be a sight to see.
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    via PIPEBURN

    La bonne série d’Andreas


    Pour sa première campagne complète en WRC, le Norvégien Andreas Mikkelsen (VW/Michelin) est le plus régulier de la saison 2014. Il semble assuré de finir sur le podium du championnat…
    Il y a presqu’un an, avant le Wales Rally GB 2013, Andreas Mikkelsen nous avait accordé une interview qu’il avait conclue par ces propos :
    « En 2014, je disputerai un championnat complet avec Volkswagen et l’objectif sera de signer de bons résultats. J’aimerais jouer le podium sur quelques manches, me rapprocher de mes équipiers.J’ai beaucoup progressé. Je pense avoir le potentiel, mais je manque encore de constance. C’est d’ailleurs ce qui m’impressionne le plus chez les top-pilotes : leur capacité à aller très vite et très longtemps »
    Au regard de sa saison 2014, le Norvégien a rempli tous ses objectifs avec une 3e place au championnat en vue, cinq podiums sur neige, terre, asphalte, 13 meilleurs temps et 9 fois en tête d’un rallye mondial. Et côté notoriété, Andreas a gagné plus de 100 000 fans sur Facebook…
    Avant de RallyRACC-Rally de Espana, Andreas Mikkelsen est le seul pilote du WRC sur une série de 3 podiums consécutifs depuis le Rallye Deutschland, et de 8 places dans les points depuis le Rallye du Portugal en avril dernier. En fait, depuis sa faute au Mexique, il n’a jamais terminé au-delà de la 4e place, ce qui en fait le pilote le plus constant de la saison. Sa progression est aussi impressionnante sur asphalte avec trois meilleurs temps réalisés en Alsace, dont un dans la plus longue spéciale.
    Quasiment assuré d’un podium au championnat Pilotes 2014 après avoir pris l’ascendant sur Mikko Hirvonen et Mads Ostberg, Andreas Mikkelsen n’a pas de pression particulière au départ de ce RallyRACC-Rally de Espana, hormis peut-être celle d’offrir une 3e place au championnat Copilotes à son navigateur Ola Floene qui l’a rejoint en cours d’année, au Rallye d’Argentine. Un retour avec le copilote de ses débuts – et à un système de notes en norvégien – qui lui fut visiblement très bénéfique.
    Après Thierry Neuville (26 ans) en Allemagne, qui d’Andreas Mikkelsen (25 ans) ou de Kris Meeke (35 ans) sera le prochain pilote à rejoindre le club des vainqueurs en WRC ? « La première victoire mondiale d’Andreas n’est qu’une question de temps », a déclaré Jost Capito à l’arrivée du Rallye de France-Alsace. Le patron de Volkswagen Motorsport devra peut-être gérer un match à trois pour le titre 2015.

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